In This Issue
Pets at Home opens up store inside Tesco Extra
How pet shop owner overcame disability to win Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award
New additions to the YAKERS Himalayan dog chew range
Pets at Home unveils new dog food
Global recognition for pet food company’s ethical stance
Britain’s most dog-friendly pub revealed
Stars sign up for music festival for pet charity
Major pet companies book their stands at PATS Sandown
Pooch & Mutt take Christmas global
PATS produces video of top shows
PDSA – caring for vulnerable pets for 100 years
Get your own copy of Pet Trade Xtra
Pet product is a Christmas bestseller
Two top awards for CSJ
Robin Hargreaves joins Agria as Vet Panel Lead
Veterinary clinics can buy WildWash through NVS
Agria in the running for major industry award
The best of the previous Pet Trade Xtra
Models get naked to ‘expose pet food industry’
Hull pet shop set to close after 71 years…but owner says he's staying in the industry
Woman who sold puppies from illegal 'pet shop' fined £1,630
CONTACT US NOW
Find out how Pet Trade Xtra can help to promote your business and products.

Please contact neil.pope@tgcmc.co.uk for all editorial matters.



Email ben.greenwood@tgcmc.co.uk to discuss advertising and sponsorship opportunities.
Woman who sold puppies from illegal 'pet shop' fined £1,630

 

A woman who illegally imported sick border collie puppies from a puppy farm in Ireland and passed them off as a home breed has been ordered to pay £1,630 for running a 'pet shop' without a licence.

 

Helen Moorey of Ashbury, near Wantage, Oxfordshire, was fined £600 and told to pay a £30 victim surcharge and £1,000 costs.

 

The sentence comes after the 55-year-old was found guilty of breaching Section 1 of the Pet Animals Act 1951 at Oxford Magistrates’ Court on Thursday, November 2.

 

During the trial, six witnesses gave evidence that Moorey had been involved with puppy sales last year and this year.

 

Given the frequency that puppies were available for sale and the fact Moorey refused to let anyone into her property to meet the puppies’ mother, it was decided this was a commercial operation and required a licence.

 

Moorey, who is already serving a jail term for fraud relating to the operation, did not give evidence at this trial.

 

In sentencing, the District Judge took Ms Moorey’s limited means into account, along with other recent convictions for fraud relating to the sale of puppies, for which she was serving a prison sentence.

 

A full report of the case can be found on the Oxford Mail website – click here to view

 

Pictured: One of the puppies being sold illegally by Helen Moorey. (Courtesy RSPCA)

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn